Starmer must be grateful for the Guardian’s latest puff piece

  • Post last modified:June 23, 2024
  • Reading time:10 mins read


In a functional democracy, the questions politicians have to answer would become harder and harder as the general election rolled on. In the UK, the closer a politician comes to power, the softer they get soaped by the client journalists in their orbit.

As an example, people are widely criticising a Guardian interview with Keir Starmer for avoiding all of the questions to which the Labour leader has no answers:

Starmer: more no one than anyone

The extended tweet from journalist Jonathan Cook reads:

In the article, he even gets away unchallenged with criticising his Tory opponent for behaving as if ‘it doesn’t matter what you do on the international stage any more’.

It certainly does, Sir Keir. And what you’ve done on the international stage is assist Israel in committing genocide.

Others had similar criticisms:

Some people highlighted the following:

The section in the piece relates to Starmer’s children:

He says it’s “difficult” at times. Children’s shoes were placed by protesters in his front garden to symbolise the high death toll in Gaza. Even simple things: looking out of their windows, they see journalists in the street. “That affects them. I am acutely aware.”

Whenever politicians are doing something unspeakable, it’s common for the British media to shift focus to how protest affects those who have drawn the attention of protesters. It’s a neat way of not talking about the actions which made protest necessary in the first place:

How much the media cares about politicians’ right to privacy is notoriously fickle:

 

Back to the interview, it’s not like Starmer had good answers for the easy questions either:

Fittingly, Starmer is also on the record as being a fan of Franz Kafka:

We say ‘fittingly’ because Kafka wrote The Metamorphosis in which a human being turns into a giant insect with no discernible personality.

In another example of the Labour leader being given an easy ride, a rival candidate in Starmer’s seat of Holborn & St Pancras noted the following:

 

Feinstein is a former South African politician, and we previously reported on him saying:

Our democracy is in crisis. The two main parties are virtually indistinguishable in their offers of permanent austerity, forever wars and environmental degradation.

Keir Starmer, the MP for Holborn and St. Pancras where my family and I have lived for around 22 years, is emblematic of this crisis. His politics are mendacious, unprincipled and in the interests of his billionaire donors rather than the constituents he was elected to serve.

I have seen real leadership in action: I was privileged to serve under Nelson Mandela as an MP in South Africa. His leadership was selfless, principled, accountable, transparent and honest. Everything that Keir Starmer is not.

Sad and predictable, but not inevitable

The British media has always been the press wing of the establishment, but that isn’t an inevitable state of affairs. More and more people can see what’s actually going on, and among them are members of the very same establishment media:

Tweet from journalist Michael Crick which reads: "In two to three years time, when Starmer and his government are no doubt deeply unpopular, I hope we in the media will ask ourselves: "Why were we so supine during the long 2024 election; why didn't we hold Labour properly to account while we could, and ask more probing questions, and explore their records, rather than give them such an easy ride?"."Tweet from journalist Michael Crick which reads: "In two to three years time, when Starmer and his government are no doubt deeply unpopular, I hope we in the media will ask ourselves: "Why were we so supine during the long 2024 election; why didn't we hold Labour properly to account while we could, and ask more probing questions, and explore their records, rather than give them such an easy ride?"."

In “two to three years time”, remember that some of us have been asking “probing questions” since before he was even the Labour leader.

Featured image via GBNews





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